On the go and no time to finish that story right now? Your News is the place for you to save content to read later from any device. Register with us and content you save will appear here so you can access them to read later.

John Armstrong: Crisis calls on Key to use all his skills

1 Sep, 2014 6:10am

3 minutes to read

Video will play in

Play now

Don't auto play

Never auto play

Prime Minister John Key has confirmed he has received a subpoena to appear before the Inspector General of Security and Intelligence for a closed hearing nine days before the election. Mr Key said he was not surprised as he had expected Inspector General Cheryl Gwynn to do a thorough inquiry.

PM needs to get campaign back on track or next Cabinet meeting could be his last.

It is not so much death by a thousand cuts; it is death from being buried by thousands of emails.

It is going to require all of John Key's political skills to get National's election campaign back on an even keel following the forced resignation of Judith Collins and yet more damaging allegations regarding her modus operandi as a minister.

John Key visited St Lukes this morning, getting amongst the shoppers and trying to move on from 'Dirty Politics'.

Otherwise next Monday's Cabinet meeting - the final one before the election - could well be the last one Key chairs.

No prizes for guessing what will be top of the agenda at today's Cabinet meeting. Whatever rescue strategy has been worked out by senior ministers has to second-guess heaven knows what else that might seep out of cyberspace and expose other warts on National's body politic.

John Key has announced the resignation of Justice Minister Judith Collins, effective immediately.

It is unlikely that today's "fiscal announcement" by Bill English on the likelihood of future tax cuts will drown out the cacophony provoked by the weekend's allegations that Collins - along with Whale Oil blogger Cameron Slater - was party to a smear campaign against the head of the Serious Fraud Office. The latter charge has been denied by Collins.

But the allegation that connections close to former Hanover boss Mark Hotchin were working with Slater changes things a lot.

It will be a sore point among the tens of thousands of voters who lost millions of dollars in savings from the collapse of finance houses. The undermining of the SFO says to those voters that National was never on their side when it came to sheeting home responsibility for the chaos in that part of the finance industry. It brings the whole issue of "dirty politics" much closer to home.

Some mud seems bound to stick to Key. Labour, the Greens and New Zealand First sense that he is Teflon Man no more. With Collins gone, those parties are going hell for leather to persuade voters that Key is as culpable as she is for her alleged behaviour; that it is a culture that has infected the whole Government.

The one small consolation for Key is that it was assumed if National leaks votes from this episode, they are more likely to go to New Zealand First and the Conservatives than the centre-left parties. Last night's One News-Colmar Brunton poll suggests otherwise.

Key could do himself some good by spelling out exactly what kind of inquiry he intends establishing to get to the bottom of the allegations against Collins. He says he is taking advice on that. That may be normal procedure. But these are abnormal times.